The COASTS of the GENTILES.
The decayed and disfranchised borough
of Calcombe Pomeroy, or Calcombe-on-the-Sea, is one
of the prettiest and quietest little out-of-the-way
watering-places in the whole smiling southern slope
of the county of Devon. Thank heaven, the Great
Western Railway, when planning its organised devastations
along the beautiful rural region of the South Hams,
left poor little Calcombe out in the cold; and the
consequence is that those few people who still love
to linger in the uncontaminated rustic England of
our wiser forefathers can here find a beach unspoiled
by goat-carriages or black-faced minstrels, a tiny
parade uninvaded by stucco terraces or German brass
bands, and an ancient stone pier off which swimmers
may take a header direct, in the early morning, before
the sumptuary edicts of his worship the Mayor compel
them to resort to the use of bathing-machines and
the decent covering of an approved costume, between
the hours of eight and eight. A board beside the
mouth of the harbour, signed by a Secretary of State
to his late Majesty King William the Fourth, still
announces to a heedless world the tolls to be paid
for entry by the ships that never arrive; and a superannuated
official in a wooden leg and a gold cap-band retains
the honourable sinecure of a harbour-mastership, with
a hypothetical salary nominally payable from the non-existent
fees and port dues. The little river Cale, at
the bottom of whose combe the wee town nestles snugly,
has cut itself a deep valley in the soft sandstone
hills; and the gap in the cliffs formed by its mouth
gives room for the few hundred yards of level on which
the antiquated little parade is warmly ensconced.
On either hand tall bluffs of brilliant red marl raise
their honeycombed faces fronting the sea; and in the
distance the sheeny grey rocks of the harder Devonian
promontories gleam like watered satin in the slant
rays of the afternoon sun. Altogether a very
sleepy little old-world place is Calcombe Pomeroy,
specially reserved by the overruling chance of the
universe to be a summer retreat for quiet, peace-loving,
old-world people.
The Londoner who escapes for a while
from the great teeming human ant-hill, with its dark
foggy lanes and solid firmament of hanging smoke,
to draw in a little unadulterated atmosphere at Calcombe
Pomeroy, finds himself landed by the Plymouth slow
train at Calcombe Road Station, twelve miles by cross-country
highway from his final destination. The little
grey box, described in the time-tables as a commodious
omnibus, which takes him on for the rest of his journey,
crawls slowly up the first six miles to the summit
of the intervening range at the Cross Foxes Inn, and
jolts swiftly down the other six miles, with red hot
drag creaking and groaning lugubriously, till it seems
to topple over sheer into the sea at the clambering
High Street of the old borough. As you turn to
descend the seaward slope at the Cross Foxes, you appear
to leave modern industrial England and the nineteenth
century well behind you on the north, and you go down
into a little isolated primaeval dale, cut off from
all the outer world by the high ridge that girds it
round on every side, and turned only on the southern
front towards the open Channel and the backing sun.
Half-way down the steep cobble-paved High Street,
just after you pass the big dull russet church, a
small shop on the left-hand side bears a signboard
with the painted legend, ’Oswald, Family Grocer
and Provision Dealer.’ In the front bay
window of that red-brick house, built out just over
the shop, Harry Oswald, Fellow and Lecturer of Oriel
College, Oxford, kept his big oak writing-desk; and
at that desk he might be seen reading or writing on
most mornings during the long vacation, after the
end of his three weeks’ stay at a London West-end
lodging-house, from which he had paid his first visit
to Max Schurz’s Sunday evening receptions.
’Two pounds of best black tea,
good quality—yours is generally atrocious,
Mrs. Oswald—that’s the next thing
on the list,’ said poor trembling, shaky Miss
Luttrell, the Squire’s sister, a palsied old
lady with a quavering, querulous, rasping voice.
’Two pounds of best black tea, and mind you
don’t send it all dust, as you usually do.
No good tea to be got nowadays, since they took the
duties off and ruined the country. And I see
a tall young man lounging about the place sometimes,
and never touching his hat to me as he ought to do.
Young people have no manners in these times, Mrs. Oswald,
as they used to have when you and I were young.
Your son, I suppose, come home from sea or something?
He’s in the fish-curing line, isn’t he,
I think I’ve heard you say?’
’I don’t rightly know
who ‘ee may mean, Miss Luttrell,’ replied
the mother proudly, ’by a young man lounging
about the place; but my son’s at home from Oxford
at present for his vacations, and he isn’t in
the fish-curing line at all, ma’am, but he’s
a Fellow of his college, as I’ve told ’ee
more than once already; but you’re getting old,
I see, Miss Luttrell, and your memory isn’t just
what it had used to be, dost know.’
‘Oh, at Oxford, is he?’
Miss Luttrell chimed on vacantly, wagging her wrinkled
old head in solemn deprecation of tke evil omen.
She knew it as well as Mrs. Oswald herself did, having
heard the fact at least a thousand times before; but
she made it a matter of principle never to encourage
these upstart pretensions on the part of the lower
orders, and just to keep them rigorously at their
proper level she always made a feint of forgetting
any steps in advance which they might have been bold
enough to take, without humbly obtaining her previous
permission, out of their original and natural obscurity.
’Fellow of his college is he, really? Fellow
of a college! Dear me, how completely Oxford is
going to the dogs. Admitting all kinds of odd
people into the University, I understand. Why,
my second brother—the Archdeacon, you know—was
a Fellow of Magdalen for some time in his younger
days. You surprise me, quite. Fellow of
a college! You’re perfectly sure he isn’t
a National schoolmaster at Oxford instead, and that
you and his father haven’t got the two things
mixed up together in your heads, Mrs. Oswald?’
’No, ma’am, we’in
perfectly sure of it, and we haven’t got the
things mixed up in our heads at all, no more nor you
have, Miss Luttrell. He was a scholar of Trinity
first, and now he’s got a Fellowship at Oriel.
You must mind hearing all about it at the time, only
you’re getting so forgetful like now, with years
and such like.’ Mrs. Oswald knew there
was nothing that annoyed the old lady so much as any
allusion to her increasing age or infirmities, and
she took her revenge out of her in that simple retributive
fashion.
’A scholar of Trinity, was he?
Ah, yes, patronage will do a great deal in these days,
for certain. The Rector took a wonderful interest
in your boy, I think, Mrs. Oswald. He went to
Plymouth Grammar School, I remember now, with a nomination
no doubt; and there, I dare say, he attracted some
attention, being a decent, hard-working lad, and got
sent to Oxford with a sizarship, or something of the
sort; there are all kinds of arrangements like that
at the Universities, I believe, to encourage poor
young men of respectable character. They become
missionaries or ushers in the end, and often get very
good salaries, considering everything, I’m told.’
‘There you’re wrong, again,
ma’am,’ put in Mrs. Oswald, stoutly.
’My husband, he sent Harry to Plymouth School
at our own expense; and after that he got an exhibition
from the school, and an open scholarship, I think
they call it, at the college; and he’s been no
more beholden to patronage, ma’am, than your
brother the Archdeacon was, nor for the matter o’
that not so much neither; for I’ve a’ways
understood the old Squire sent him first to the Charterhouse,
and afterwards he got a living through Lord Modbury’s
influence, as the Squire voted regular with the Modbury
people for the borough and county. But George
was always independent, Miss Luttrell, and beholden
to neither Luttrells nor Modburies, and that I tell
’ee to your face, ma’am, and no shame
of it either.’
‘Well, well, Mrs. Oswald,’
said the old lady, shaking her head more violently
than ever at this direct discomfiture, ’I don’t
want to argue with you about the matter. I dare
say your son’s a very worthy young man, and
has worked his way up into a position he wasn’t
intended for by Providence. But it’s no
business of mine, thank heaven, it’s no business
of mine, for I’m not responsible for all the
vagaries of all the tradespeople on my brother’s
estate, nor don’t want to be. There’s
Mrs. Figgins, now, the baker’s wife; her daughter
has just chosen to get married to a bank clerk in London;
and I said to her this morning, “Well, Mrs. Figgins,
so you’ve let your Polly go and pick up with
some young fellow from town that you’ve never
seen before, haven’t you? And that’s
the way of all you people. You marry your girls
to bank clerks without a reference, for the sake of
getting ’em off your hands, and what’s
the consequence? They rob their employers to
keep up a pretty household for their wives, as if
they were fine ladies; and then at last the thing’s
discovered, there comes a smash, they run away to America,
and you have your daughters and their children thrown
back again penniless upon your hands.”
That’s what I said to her, Mrs. Oswald.
And how’s your daughter, by the way—Jemima
I think you call her; how’s she, eh, tell me?’
’I beg your pardon, Miss Luttrell,
but her name’s not Jemima; it’s Edith.’
’Oh, Edith, is it? Well
to be sure! The grand names girls have dangling
about with them nowadays! My name’s plain
Catherine, and it’s good enough for me, thank
goodness. But these young ladies of the new
style must be Ediths and Eleanors and Ophelias, and
all that heathenish kind of thing, as if they were
princesses of the blood or play-actresses, instead
of being good Christian Susans and Janes and Betties,
like their grandmothers were before them. And
Miss Edith, now, what is she doing?’
’She’s doing nothing in
particular at this moment, Miss Luttrell, leastways
not so far as I know of; but she’s going up to
Oxford part of this term on a visit to her brother.’
’Going up to Oxford, my good
woman! Why, heaven bless the girl, she’d
much better stop at home and learn her catechism.
She should try to do her duty in that station of life
to which it has pleased Providence to call her, instead
of running after young gentlemen above her own rank
and place in society at Oxford. Tell her so from
me, Mrs. Oswald, and mind you don’t send the
tea dusty. Two pounds of your best, if you please,
as soon as you can send it. Good-morning.’
And Miss Luttrell, having discovered the absolute
truth of the shocking rumour which had reached her
about Edith’s projected visit, the confirmation
of which was the sole object of her colloquy, wagged
her way out of the shop again successfully, and was
duly assisted by the page-boy into her shambling little
palsied donkey-chair.
‘That was all the old cat came
about, you warr’nt you,’ muttered Mr.
Oswald himself from behind his biscuit-boxes.
’Must have heard it from the Rector’s
wife, and wanted to find out if it was true, to go
and tell Mrs. Walters o’ such a bit o’
turble presumptiousness.’
Meanwhile, in the little study with
the bow-window over the shop, Harry and Edie Oswald
were busily discussing the necessary preparations
for Edie’s long-promised visit to the University.
’I hope you’ve got everything
nice in the way of dress, you know, Edie,’ said
Harry. ’You’ll want a decent dinner
dress, of course, for you’ll be asked out to
dine at least once or twice; and I want you to have
everything exceedingly proper and pretty.’
’I think I’ve got all
I need in that way, Harry; I’ve my dark poplin,
cut square in the bodice, for one dinner dress, and
my high black silk to fall back upon for another.
Worn open in front, with a lace handkerchief and a
locket, it does really very nicely. Then I’ve
got three afternoon dresses, the grey you gave me,
the sage-greeny aesthetic one, and the peacock-blue
with the satin box-pleats. It’s a charming
dress, the peacock-blue; it looks as if it might have
stepped straight out of a genuine Titian. It came
home from Miss Wells’s this morning. Wait
five minutes, like a dear boy, and I’ll run
and put it on and let you see me in it.’
’That’s a good girl, do.
I’m so anxious you should have all your clothes
the exact pink of perfection, Popsy. Though I’m
afraid I’m a very poor critic in that matter—if
you were only a problem in space of four dimensions,
now! Yet, after all, every man or woman is more
of a problem than anything in x square plus y square
you can possibly set yourself.’
Edie ran lightly up into her own room,
and soon reappeared clad resplendent in the new peacock-blue
dress, with hat and parasol to match, and a little
creamy lamb’s-wool scarf thrown with artful
carelessness around her pretty neck and shoulders.
Harry looked at her with unfeigned admiration.
Indeed, you would not easily find many lighter or
more fairly-like little girls than Edie Oswald, even
in the beautiful half-Celtic South Hams of Devon.
In figure she was rather small than short, for though
she was but a wee thing, her form was so exactly and
delicately modelled that she might have looked tall
if she stood alone at a little distance. She
never walked, but seemed to dance about from place
to place, so buoyant and light, that Harry doubted
whether in her case gravitation could really vary
as the square of the distance—it seemed,
in fact, to be almost diminished in the proportions
of the cube. Her hair and eyes—such
big bright eyes!—were dark; but her complexion
was scarcely brunette, and the colour in her cheeks
was rich and peach-like, after the true Devonian type.
She was dimpled whenever she smiled, and she smiled
often; her full lips giving a peculiar ripe look to
her laughing mouth that suited admirably with her
light and delicate style of beauty. Perhaps some
people might have thought them too full; certainly
they irresistibly suggested to a critical eye the
distinct notion of kissability. As she stood
there, faintly blushing, waiting to be admired by her
brother, in her neatly fitting dainty blue dress,
her lips half parted, and her arms held carelessly
at her side, she looked about as much like a fairy
picture as it is given to mere human flesh and blood
to look.
‘It’s delicious, Edie,’
said Harry, surveying her from, head to foot with
a smile of satisfaction which made her blush deepen;
‘it’s simply delicious. Where on earth
did you get the idea of it?’
‘Well, it’s partly the
present style,’ said Edie; ’but I took
the notion of the bodice partly too from that Vandyck,
you know, in the Palazzo Bossi at Genoa.’
‘I remember, I remember,’
Harry answered, contemplating her with an admiring
eye. ’Now just turn round and show me how
it sits behind, Edie. You recollect Théophile
Gautier says the one great advantage which a beautiful
woman possesses over a beautiful statue is this, that
while a man has to walk round the beautiful statue
in order to see it from every side, he can ask the
beautiful woman to turn herself round and let him
see her, without requiring to take that trouble.’
’Théophile Gautier was a horrid
man, and if anybody but my brother quoted such a thing
as that to me I should be very angry with him indeed.’
’Théophile Gautier was quite
as horrid as you consider him to be, and if you were
anybody but my sister it isn’t probable I should
have quoted him to you. But if there is any statue
on earth prettier or more graceful than you are in
that dress at this moment, Edie, then the Venus of
Milo ought immediately to be pulverised to ultimate
atoms for a rank artistic impostor.’
’Thank you, Harry, for the compliment.
What pretty things you must be capable of saying to
somebody else’s sister, when you’re so
polite and courtly to your own.’
’On the contrary, Popsy, when
it comes to somebody else’s sister I’m
much too nervous and funky to say anything of the kind.
But you must at least do Gautier the justice to observe
that if I had described a circle round you, instead
of allowing you to revolve once on your own axis,
I shouldn’t have been able to get the gloss
on the satin in the sunlight as I do now that you turn
the panniers toward the window. That, you must
admit, is a very important aesthetic consideration.’
‘Oh, of course it’s essentially
a sunshiny dress,’ said Edie, smiling.
’It’s meant to be worn out of doors, on
a fine afternoon, when the light is falling slantwise,
you know, just as it does now through the low window.
That’s the light painters always choose for
doing satin in.’
‘It’s certainly very pretty,’
Harry went on, musing; ’but I’m afraid
Le Breton would say it was a serious piece of economic
hubris.’
‘Piece of what?’ asked Edie quickly.
’Piece of hubris—an
economical outrage, don’t you see; a gross anti-social
and individualist demonstration. Hubris, you know,
is Greek for insolence; at least, not quite insolence,
but a sort of pride and overweening rebelliousness
against the gods, the kind of arrogance that brings
Nemesis after it, you understand. It was hubris
in Agamemnon and Xerxes to go swelling about and ruffling
themselves like turkey-cocks, because they were great
conquerors and all that sort of thing; and it was
their Nemesis to get murdered by Clytemnestra, or
jolly well beaten by the Athenians at Salamis.
Well, Le Breton always uses the word for anything
that he thinks socially wrong—and he thinks
a good many things socially wrong, I can tell you—anything
that partakes of the nature of a class distinction,
or a mere vulgar ostentation of wealth, or a useless
waste of good, serviceable, labour-gotten material.
He would call it hubris to have silver spoons when
electroplate would do just as well; or to keep a valet
for your own personal attendant, making one man into
the mere bodily appanage of another; or to buy anything
you didn’t really need, causing somebody else
to do work for you which might otherwise have been
avoided.’
‘Which Mr. Le Breton—the elder or
the younger one?’
’Oh, the younger—Ernest.
As for Herbert, the Fellow of St. Aldate’s,
he’s not troubled with any such scruples; he
takes the world as he finds it.’
‘They’ve both gone in for their degrees,
haven’t they?’
’Yes, Herbert has got a fellowship;
Ernest’s up in residence still looking about
for one.’
‘It’s Ernest that would
think my dress a piece of what-you-may-call-it?’
‘Yes, Ernest.’
’Then I’m sure I shan’t
like him. I should insist upon every woman’s
natural right to wear the dress or hat or bonnet that
suits her complexion best.’
’You can’t tell, Edie,
till you’ve met him. He’s a very good
fellow; and of one thing I’m certain, whatever
he thinks right he does, and sticks to it.’
’But do you think, Harry,
I oughtn’t to wear a new peacock-blue camel-hair
dress on my first visit up to Oxford?’
’Well, Edie dear, I don’t
quite know what my own opinions are exactly upon that
matter. I’m not an economist, you see, I’m
a man of science. When I look at you, standing
there so pretty in that pretty dress, I feel inclined
to say to myself, “Every woman ought to do her
best to make herself look as beautiful as she can for
the common delectation of all humanity.”
Your beauty, a Greek would have said, is a gift from
the gods to us all, and we ought all gratefully to
make the most of it. I’m sure I do.’
’Thank you, Harry, again.
You’re in your politest humour this afternoon.’
’But then, on the other hand,
I know if Le Breton were here he’d soon argue
me over to the other side. He has the enthusiasm
of humanity so strong upon him that you can’t
help agreeing with him as long as he’s talking
to you.’
’Then if he were here you’d
probably make me put away the peacock-blue, for fear
of hubris and Nemesis and so forth, and go up to Oxford
a perfect fright in my shabby old Indian tussore!’
’I don’t know that I should
do that, even then, Edie. In the first place,
nothing on earth could make you look a perfect fright,
or anything like one, Popsy dear; and in the second
place, I don’t know that I’m Socialist
enough myself ever to have the courage of my opinions
as Le Breton has. Certainly, I should never attempt
to force them unwillingly upon others. You must
remember, Edie, it’s one thing for Le Breton
to be so communistic as all that comes to, and quite
another thing for you and me. Le Breton’s
father was a general and a knight, you see; and people
will never forget that his mother’s Lady Le
Breton still, whatever he does. He may do what
he likes in the way of social eccentricities, and the
world will only say he’s such a very strange
advanced young fellow. But if I were to take
you up to Oxford badly dressed, or out of the fashion,
or looking peculiar in any way, the world wouldn’t
put it down to our political beliefs, but would say
we were mere country tradespeople by birth, and didn’t
know any better. That makes a lot of difference,
you know.’
’You’re quite right, Harry;
and yet, do you know, I think there must be something,
too, in sticking to one’s own opinions, like
Mr. Le Breton. I should stick to mine, I’m
sure, and wear whatever dress I liked, in spite of
anybody. It’s a sweet thing, really, isn’t
it?’ And she turned herself round, craning over
her shoulder to look at the effect, in a vain attempt
to assume an objective attitude towards her own back.
‘I’m glad I’m going
to Oxford at last, Harry,’ she said, after a
short pause. ’I have so longed to go
all these years while you were an undergraduate; and
I’m dying to have got there, now the chance
has really come at last, after all. I shall glory
in the place, I’m certain; and it’ll be
so nice to make the acquaintance of all your clever
friends.’
‘Well, Edie,’ said her
brother, smiling gently at the light, joyous, tremulous
little figure, ’I think I’ve done right
in putting it off till now. It’s just as
well you haven’t gone up to Oxford till after
your trip on the Continent with me. That three
months in Paris, and Switzerland, and Venice, and
Florence, did you a lot of good, you see; improved
you, and gave you tone, and supplied you with things
to talk about.’
‘Why, you oughtn’t to
think I needed any improvement at all, sir,’
Edie answered, pouting; ’and as to talking, I’m
not aware I had ever any dearth of subjects for conversation
even before I went on the Continent. There are
things enough to be said about heaven and earth in
England, surely, without one having to hurry through
France and Italy, like Cook’s excursionists,
just to hunt up something fresh to chatter about.
It’s my belief that a person who can’t
find anything new to say about the every-day world
around her won’t discover much suggestive matter
for conversation in a Continental Bradshaw. It’s
like that feeble watery lady I met at the table d’hote
at Geneva. From something she said I gathered
she’d been in India, and I asked her how she
liked it. “Oh,” she said, “it’s
very hot.” I told her I had heard so before.
Presently she said something casually about having
been in Brazil. I asked her what sort of place
Brazil was. “Oh.” she said, “it’s
dreadfully hot.” I told her I’d heard
that too. By-and-by she began to talk again about
Barbadoes. “What did you think of the West
Indies?” I said. “Oh,” said
she, “they’re terribly hot, really.”
I told her I had gathered as much from previous travellers.
And that was positively all in the end I ever got
out of her, for all her travels.’
‘My dear Edie, I’ve always
admitted that you were simply perfect,’ Harry
said, glancing at her with visible admiration, ’and
I don’t think anything on earth could possibly
improve you—except perhaps a judicious
course of differential and integral calculus, which
might possibly serve to tone down slightly your exuberant
and excessive vitality. Still, you know, from
the point of view of society, which is a force we
have always to reckon with—a constant,
in fact, that we may call Pi—there can be
no doubt in the world that to have been on the Continent
is a differentiating factor in one’s social
position. It doesn’t matter in the least
what your own private evaluation of Pi may be; if you
don’t happen to know the particular things and
places that Pi knows, Pi’s evaluation of you
will be approximately a minimum, of that you may be
certain.’
‘Well, for my part, I don’t
care twopence about Pi as you call it,’ said
Edie, tossing her pretty little head contemptuously;
’but I’m very glad indeed to have been
on the Continent for my own sake, because of the pictures,
and palaces, and mountains, and waterfalls we’ve
seen, and not because of Pi’s opinion of me for
having seen them. I would have been the same
person really whether I’d seen them or not;
but I’m so much the richer myself for that view
from the top of the Col de Balme, and for that Murillo—oh,
do you remember the flood of light on that Murillo?—in
the far corner of that delicious gallery at Bologna.
Why, mother darling, what on earth has been vexing
you?’
’Nothing at all, Edie dear;
leastways, that is, nothing to speak of,’ said
her mother, coming up from the shop hot and flurried
from her desperate encounter with the redoubtable
Miss Luttrell.
‘Oh, I know just what it is,
darling,’ cried the girl, putting her arm around
her mother’s waist caressingly, and drawing her
down to kiss her face half a dozen times over in her
outburst of sympathy. ’That horrid old
Miss Catherine has been here again, I’m sure,
for I saw her going out of the shop just now, and
she’s been saying something or other spiteful,
as she always does, to vex my dearie. What did
she say to you to-day, now do tell us, duckie mother?’
‘Well, there,’ said Mrs.
Oswald, half laughing and half crying, ’I can’t
tell ’ee exactly what she did say, but it was
just the kind of thing that she mostly does, impudent
like, just to hurt a body’s feelings. She
said you’d better not go to Oxford, Edie, but
stop at home and learn your catechism.’
‘You might have pointed out
to her, mother dear,’ said the young man, smoothing
her hair softly with his hand, and kissing her forehead,
’that in the most advanced intellectual centres
the Church catechism is perhaps no longer regarded
as the absolute ultimatum of the highest and deepest
economical wisdom.’
’Bless your heart, Harry, what’d
be the good of talking that way to the likes of she?
She wouldn’t understand a single word of what
you were driving at. It must be all plain sailing
with her, without it’s in the way of spite,
and then she sees her chance to tack round the hardest
corner with half a wind in her sails only, as soon
as look at it. Her sharpness goes all off toward
ill-nature, that it do. Why, she said you’d
got on at Oxford by good patronage!’
‘There, you see, Edie,’
cried Harry demonstratively, ’that’s an
infinitesimal fraction of Pi; that’s a minute
decimal of this great, sneering, ugly aggregate “society”
that we have to deal with whether we will or no, and
that rends us and grinds us to powder if only it can
once get in the thin end of a chance. Take shaky
bitter old Miss Catherine for your unit, multiply her
to the nth, and there you see the irreducible power
we have to fight against. All one’s political
economy is very well in its way; but the practical
master of the situation is Pi, sitting autocratically
in many-headed judgment on our poor solitary little
individualities, and crushing us irretrievably with
the dead weight of its inexorable cumulative nothingness.
And to think that that quivering old mass of perambulating
jealousy—that living incarnation of envy,
hatred, malice, and all uncharitableness—should
be able to make you uncomfortable for a single moment,
mother darling, with her petty, dribbling, doddering
venom, why, it’s simply unendurable.’
‘There now, Harry,’ said
Mrs. Oswald, relenting, ’you mustn’t be
too hard, neither, on poor old Miss Catherine.
She’s a bit soured, you see, by disappointments
and one thing and another. She doesn’t
mean it, really, but it’s just her nature.
Folks can’t be blamed for their nature, now,
can they?’
‘It occurs to me,’ said
Harry quietly, ’that vipers only sting because
it’s their nature; and Dr. Watts has made a similar
observation with regard to the growling and fighting
of bears and lions. But I’m not aware that
anybody has yet proposed to get up a Society for the
protection of those much-misunderstood creatures, on
the ground that they are not really responsible for
their own inherited dispositions. Mr. William
Sikes had a nature (no doubt congenital) which impelled
him to beat his wife—I’m not sure
that she was even his wife at all, now I come to think
of it, but that’s a mere detail—and
to kick his familiar acquaintances casually about the
head. We, on the other hand, have natures which
impel us, when we catch Mr. William Sikes indulging
in these innate idiosyncrasies by way of recreation,
to clap him promptly into prison, and even, under
certain aggravating conditions, to cause him to be
hanged by the neck till he be dead. This may
be a regrettable incident of our own peculiar dispositions,
mother dear, but it has at least the same justification
as Mr. Sikes’s or the bears’ and lions’,
that ’tis our nature to. And I feel pretty
much the same way about old Miss Luttrell.’
‘Well, there,’ said his
mother, kissing him gently, ’you’re a bad
rebellious boy to be calling names, like a chatter-mag,
and I won’t listen to you any longer. How
pretty Edie do look in her new dress, to be sure,
Harry. I’ll warr’nt there won’t
be a prettier girl in Oxford next week than what she
is; no, nor a better one and a sweeter one neither.’
Harry put his arms round both their
waists at once, with an affectionate pressure; and
they went down to their old-fashioned tea together
in the little parlour behind the shop, looking out
over the garden, and the beach, and the great cliffs
beyond on either hand, to the very farthest edge of
the distant clear-cut blue horizon.